Sarandos on Thursday made fun of reports that mixed reviews for its reboot of the cult comedy series drove down the company’s stock.

Shares of Netflix fell more than 6% to $214.19 a share Tuesday, the first day of trading after the company made all 15 episodes of the show’s long-awaited fourth season available Sunday for streaming online.

He argued that the new season was not designed for binge-watching and that reviewers who allowed themselves to digest the episodes for longer enjoyed the show more. Besides, he argued, that’s not how most fans are consuming it.

“A small percentage of people burned through all of them,” he said.

At the same time, Sarandos said there are no other shows on deck to be resurrected by Netflix. The critically beloved "Arrested Development" was canceled by Fox in 2006 because of poor ratings, but it developed a following that grew after its cancellation.

Sarandos said there have been calls the revive the short-lived science-fiction series "Firefly" – also a niche favorite – but it wouldn’t make sense for Netflix to do it.

“It’s a really rare bird," he said of "Arrested Development." "TV cults get more intense but typically smaller over time. 'Arrested Development' was unique because the audience grew dramatically when it was off the air.”